Industrial Disease (song)
"Industrial Disease" | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Single by Dire Straits | ||||
from the album Love over Gold | ||||
B-side | "Badges, Posters, Stickers, T-Shirts" | |||
Released | November 1982[1] | |||
Genre | Rock | |||
Length | 4:17 (single version) 5:48 (album version) | |||
Label | Vertigo Records | |||
Songwriter(s) | Mark Knopfler | |||
Producer(s) | Mark Knopfler | |||
Dire Straits singles chronology | ||||
|
"Industrial Disease" is a song by British rock band Dire Straits, written by Mark Knopfler. It appeared on the band's 1982 album Love over Gold. The song was released as a single in the United States and as a rare B-side to "Private Investigations" on cassette tape in the United Kingdom.
Meaning
The song's title is a British term for work-related illness or disease, a frequent subject in British news media at the time. The significance of the phrase was obscure to listeners in the United States, where the term occupational disease is used instead. There is a double meaning in that, at the time, "industrial disease" referred to both an occupational illness and the decline of British industry.
The background and subject matter of the lyrics was ostensibly the decline of the British manufacturing industry in the early 1980s,[2] describing strikes, clinical and economic depression, and societal dysfunction. However, the song is an extended metaphor, with the idea of the dehumanising routine and repetition of the nine-to-five itself as the real culprit of society's malaise. About halfway through the song, the narrator goes to the doctor, only to be told his own illness is diagnosed as industrial disease. The double meaning is maintained, however, as the doctor is "Dr. Parkinson". Dr. C. Northcote Parkinson, a British university professor of history also was the author of several popular satirical works on dysfunction in British institutions and organizations in the 1950s and 60s, of which the best known is Parkinson's Law.
A reference to "brewer's droop" as a medical condition is an in-joke, using a British colloquial term for alcohol-related erectile dysfunction to allude to Brewers Droop, a 1970s pub rock band in which songwriter Mark Knopfler and drummer Pick Withers had played prior to Dire Straits.
Charts
Chart | Peak Date | Weeks on Chart | Peak Position |
US Billboard Mainstream Rock Airplay[3] | 4 December 1982 | 18 | 9 |
US Billboard Hot 100[4] | 22 January 1983 | 4 | 75 |
References
- ^ Strong, Martin Charles (1995). The Great Rock Discography. p. 227. ISBN 9780862415419.
- ^ Sexton, Paul (8 January 2021). "'Industrial Disease': Dire Straits Work Up A Rock Radio Hit". uDiscoverMusic.
- ^ "Mainstream Rock Airplay". Billboard. 4 December 1982.
- ^ "Dire Straits Chart History". Billboard. Retrieved 20 June 2021.
- v
- t
- e
- Mark Knopfler
- John Illsley
- Pick Withers
- David Knopfler
- Alan Clark
- Hal Lindes
- Terry Williams
- Guy Fletcher
- Jack Sonni
- Dire Straits
- Communiqué
- Making Movies
- Love over Gold
- Brothers in Arms
- On Every Street
- Alchemy
- On the Night
- Live at the BBC
- Money for Nothing
- Sultans of Swing: The Very Best of Dire Straits
- Private Investigations: The Best of Dire Straits & Mark Knopfler
- ExtendedancEPlay
- Encores
- "Sultans of Swing"
- "Water of Love" / "Down to the Waterline"
- "Lady Writer"
- "Romeo and Juliet"
- "Skateaway"
- "Tunnel of Love"
- "Telegraph Road"
- "Private Investigations"
- "Industrial Disease"
- "Twisting by the Pool"
- "Love over Gold"
- "So Far Away"
- "Money for Nothing"
- "Brothers in Arms"
- "Walk of Life"
- "Your Latest Trick"
- "Calling Elvis"
- "Heavy Fuel"
- "On Every Street"
- "The Bug"
- "You and Your Friend"
- Discography
- Band members
- Omar Hakim
- Chris White
- The Notting Hillbillies
- Category
This 1980s rock song–related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e